Hi,
We have DSE cassandra cluster running on AWS.
Now we have requirement to enable Solr and Spark on the cluster.
We have cassandra on private data subnet which has connectivity to app
layer.
>From cassandra , we cant open direct Solr Web interface.
We tried using SSH tunneling and it is working
Hello Manish,
I think any disk works. As long as it is big enough. It's also better if
it's a reliable system (some kind of redundant raid, NAS, storage like GCS
or S3...). We are not looking for speed mostly during a backup, but
resiliency and not harming the source cluster mostly I would say.
Th
At my current job I had to roll my own backup system. Hopefully I can get
it OSS'd at some point. Here is a (now slightly outdated) presentation:
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/13Aps-IlQPYAa_V34ocR0E8Q4C8W2YZ6Jn5_BYGrjqFk/edit#slide=id.p
If you are struggling with the disk I/O cost of the
This is probably not a question for this community... but rather for
Datastax support or the Datastax Academy slack group. More specifically
this is a "how to expose solr securely" question which is amply answered
well on the interwebs if you look for it on Google.
rahul.xavier.si...@gmail.com
h
Answers inline.
1. Do the same people where you work operate the cluster and write
the code to develop the application?
No but the operators need to know development , data-modeling, and
generally how to "code" the application. (Coding is a low-level task of
assigning a code to a concept.
I have searched on internet but did not get any link which worked for me.
Even on
https://s3.amazonaws.com/quickstart-reference/datastax/latest/doc/datastax-enterprise-on-the-aws-cloud.pdf
it is mentioned to use SSH tunneling .
"DSE nodes have no public IP addresses. Access to the web consoles fo